States of Poetry 2016 - Western Australia | ‘At the house where my father was born’ by Carolyn Abbs
'It hurts to go through walls, it makes you sick,
but it's necessary.' − Tomas Tranströmer
I'd expected a labyrinth of small dark rooms, yet
the house was lit marigold scooped out like a pumpkin for Halloween
Flames flickered and spat in a wide fireplace
a seaweedy stench had swept in brushed walls with sea mist
Oak beams as broad as shoulders seemed safe
the floor dipped like a ship
There was a tavern of voices outside
laughter bickering sniggering
gossip in the street lingering Victorian morals
Crash of sea over rocks din of death bells
It was 1917
I was through that door that painting that wall to god knows where
A Woman in Blue Reading a Letter
a crinkly unfolding of paper sound
a letter that never came after the Somme
Her sigh swish of skirt
I turned she passed the mirror a silvery blur
a light crunch of shoe on wooden board
I saw the horror of her unwed shame in my own face
the same mirror that once held her
O to curl into the stillness of that blue velvet chair
its painterly stopping of time
Walls giddied me terrified me the emptiness of that room
She was banished
He grew as his grandma's thirteenth child
* * *
I went through silence a room bathed with pale sunlight
It was late afternoon in winter
From a window across a meadow towards the sea
I saw him walking away
He carried the burden of those walls
on his dark days dark, dark, days
Shoulders hunched
he went towards the sea
the openness of the sea
the sea...
Carolyn Abbs
'At the house where my father was born' was published in Axon: Creative Explorations, issue 9, vol. 5.2, 2015.
Recordings
'At the house where my father was born' begins at 2:35
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